Crowds were enthusiastic. One man pointed to our unit shouting, "That's what it's all about, right there!" A cop complained we were moving too slowly. Then he looked at Saint Patrick visiting with people along the route, stepped back as if to say this was out of his jurisdiction, and made a sign of the cross.

"May God Hold You in the Hollow of His Hand."

My kids are older now, and we haven't marched in two years. It's "not fair," grouses my 16-year-old daughter. She would still don a costume and get right out there.

Saint Brigid was also a popular feature
of our unit

Saint Patrick's costume rests in my basement closet. Who knows? Its time may come again...After all, what's Saint Patrick's Day without Saint Patrick?

Each year, we passed out hundreds of handmade carnations featuring this "True Story of Saint Patrick":

Over the years, we distributed more than
a thousand holy cards to the crowd

Saint Patrick

The Patron Saint of Ireland, Fifth Century

Patrick was born in a small town in Scotland. As a boy, he was kidnapped by barbarians, dragged to Ireland and sold as a slave. For years he herded sheep, going hungry and shivering in the rain and snow. But Patrick sensed God’s presence and felt comforted. He learned the language of the Irish people and grew to love them.

One night Patrick heard a voice in a dream saying, “Your ship is ready to take you home.” Patrick found the ship and the captain agreed to take him to Scotland. Reaching a monastery, Patrick stayed for two years, working and praying. He then returned to his parents.

My brother soldered
this amazing crosier.
Oops...It should
have been a three-
leaf clover!

Patrick had another dream, full of Irish voices asking him to return to Ireland. He traveled back to the land where he had been a slave and was made Bishop. He traveled all over the island, turning thousands away from pagan ways. People stopped making human sacrifices to pagan gods. Patrick ordained priests, and built many churches. People say he used the three-leaf shamrock to teach about the Blessed Trinity – the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. By the end of his life, Patrick had converted almost all of Ireland to Christianity.

St. Patrick's "Breastplate Prayer"...Christ be with me, Christ within me,
Christ behind me, Christ before me,
Christ beside me, Christ to win me,
Christ to comfort and restore me.
Christ beneath me, Christ above me,
Christ in quiet, Christ in danger,
Christ in hearts of all that love me,
Christ in mouth of friend and stranger...

This is one translation of only a small fragment of Saint Patrick's powerful prayer, also known as the Lorica or The Deer's Cry.

A mission field for bloggers:

"Without fear we must set sail on the digital sea, facing into the deep with the same passion that has governed the ship of the Church for two thousand years...we want to qualify ourselves by living in the digital world with a believer’s heart, helping to give a soul to the Internet’s incessant flow of communication."

A member of this great group...

And podcast "Missionary Moments" on Deacon Tom and Dee Fox's site offering nutrients to the soul...

Catholic Vitamins is affiliated with the global Starquest Production Network.

Catholic Vitamin W: Witness

Click on image to hear Deacon Tom Fox's (Catholic Vitamins) and my reflections on being a Christian witness in daily life. To hear the entire broadcast for Vitamin W, and access other Catholic Vitamins podcasts, click on the Catholic Vitamins banner above.

I am a voiceover artist for Shalom TV, launched in the U.S. on Divine Mercy Sunday, 2014

Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence...

Click image to hear my family sing "Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence," and my poem and meditation on "Silent Joy." This Advent/Christmas reflection is featured at the beginning of Catholic Vitamins podcast "Z" for Zealousness. Deacon Tom Fox's featured guest for the show is Catholic novelist and Chicago native Thomas Craughwell.